A politico-cultural event to celebrate May Day
Food and drinks available.
If rain, go to 112 Vine St, Fairfield.
A politico-cultural event to celebrate May Day
Food and drinks available.
If rain, go to 112 Vine St, Fairfield.
Israel continues to massacre and starve the people of Gaza, and has massed troops to continue the genocide into Rafah, where over a million Palestinians are sheltering after being forcibly displaced from the rest of Gaza.
This May Day, come join the Palestine solidarity contingent. We will be marching to call for an end to Israel's genocidal war on Gaza and real action by the Australian government, including an arms embargo, breaking diplomatic ties and imposing trade sanctions on Israel.
At the end of the hottest year in human history, a Rising Tide of everyday people shut down the world’s largest coal port for 32 hours. Here’s how we did it.
Shut Down AW Bell Community Picket, 5:00AM Picket, 9:30AM Rally, Monday May 6,145 Abbotts Rd, Dandenong South
Gaza Solidarity Encampment at RMIT University launching on Monday May 6
Wild Things is a film about three environmental struggles – against the Adani coal mine in central Queensland, saving the Tarkine forest in Tasmania and the student strike for climate action.
The people will converge at the Prime Minister's Sydney residence, Kirribilli House, to make our demands loud and clear: No more coal and gas!
Please book your free tickets via Humantix, as seats are limited:
Over the past six months, Wollongong Friends of Palestine amongst other groups have been rallying and organising to end Israel's genocide and occupation in Palestine.
More details and information will be sent in the new year. For now, you can save the date by downloading the calendar invitation for the conference.
May 15 will mark 76 years since the Nakba, the day in 1948 when Israel was created on the land and the graves of the Palestinian people, who were driven out in a concerted campaign of mass murder and terror.
Green City is a rarely-before-seen documentary about the struggle against developer greed in Gadigal-Sydney in the 1970s.
At the end of the hottest year in human history, a Rising Tide of everyday people shut down the world’s largest coal port for 32 hours. Here’s how we did it.
Come together for the Magandjin premiere of Rising Tide’s very first film, hear from people who were there in Newcastle last year, and learn how you can get involved in this diverse movement for climate defence!